As a creator and publisher of presentations to my internal stakeholders and customers, I would like to have visibility into usage information for each presentation. Information I would want to see include page views, unique user views, and time spent on each page.
It would really help me make a business case for expanding use of Aha at our org if I could point to engagement metrics. It's the very first thing I'm asked when executives see our Aha Dashboards and presentations.
Publishing roadmaps without statistics is really an half job done. How could you measure if what you publish for your customers and team ?
Agree! Need to measure the usage of the presentations and the unique user visits per month to assess Aha usage. this is an important metric for Aha adoption and its benefits.
I would also like to add that importing other data from ppt files and exporting Aha roadmaps to ppt file is another essential featured required as Field/Sales would like to use these presentation during customer presentations and leaving them as Aha presentations does not work for them
We just started using presentations to share our roadmap with clients, but we do need to know which clients/how many clients have accessed the presentation to assess the effectiveness. I would also like to see the IP addresses of those that have accessed a presentation. Thanks.
We use notebooks for many different purposes, including for tracking individual competitors. We get asked how frequently are various end users of this information accessing the notebooks, so this would be very desired functionality. Ability for notebook owner, or Aha administrator, to view how frequently a particular notebook is accessed would be terrific information to have available (page views, unique user views, and time spent on page).
I am constantly asked for this as well.
There are so many enhancements to Notebooks that should be considered and this is a great one. In general the notebooks hold a lot of promise but are very thin on features. As a mechanism for sharing allof the hard work in Aha! with a more general audience the notebooks should be considered for major re-work